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Viewing a photograph can spark powerful feelings of nostalgia that well up from our embodied memories of sense of place. Indeed, photos have been an important means of propagating nostalgic social movements since the invention of photography itself...

Jul 23, 2017

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Fundamentally, my journey is a testament to the transformative power of creativity, and one filled with valuable lessons for anyone searching for a more meaningful life. The one lesson I hope all readers take away from my story is that anyone can find healing in creativity.

Indeed, memories are rarely ‘photographic’ and I think that photographs rarely ever represent the past to us as it really was. They represent even less the meaning of past times and places in our contemporary lives.

Over the last few weeks, I’ve spent some of my spare time locating, editing and curating a number photographs I took in Colorado back in December 2012. These images have sat dormant and unappreciated for the last five years, although they have moved from one hard drive, to the cloud, to another hard drive, and then back to the cloud again over that span of time.

The LBTL was the location that offered our best chance of experiencing beautiful golden fields and placid lakes and ponds surrounded by foliage in a broad spectrum of colors. The area is 170,000 acres of forest, fields, lakes, and ponds

When I started stumbling around with techniques in compositing in photography (processes that involve blending together elements from two or more photographs), the early images instantly surfaced the word “chimera” in my mind.

You don’t have to become a full-time, professional photographer for it to change your life. Moving from defining yourself based on what you do for a living to what you do to live is a revolutionary achievement in American society.